Archive | Constitutional Law
Has the Pro-ACA Side Come up with a “Limiting Principle?”
Scalia: Federal Government is Supposed to be a Government of Limited Powers
Kiobel (III): Universality as a Constitutional Question
By Eugene Kontorovich on March 27, 2012 9:00 am in Alien Tort Statute, Constitutional Law, International Human Rights Law, International Law, Uncategorized
New York Times Profile of Co-Blogger Randy
Kiobel (II): Universality, Not More Extraterritoriality
By Eugene Kontorovich on March 26, 2012 9:32 am in Alien Tort Statute, Constitutional Law, International Human Rights Law, International Law
ObamaCare and the ATS: Can the Feds Regulate the Whole World?
By Eugene Kontorovich on March 26, 2012 8:35 am in Alien Tort Statute, Constitutional Law, Global Governance/World Government, International Human Rights Law, International Law
The ACA and Mandatory Contraception Coverage
Can the Federal Government Pass a Compulsory Education Law?
The Congress Can-Do-Whatever-it-Wants Power
The Individual Mandate Litigation: What’s Lochner got to do with It?
By David Bernstein on March 21, 2012 9:24 pm in Academia, Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Health Care
ConText: Crowd-Sourcing James Madison’s Notes of the Convention
Review of Flagrant Conduct in the New York Review of Books
By Dale Carpenter on March 16, 2012 10:01 am in Civil Rights, Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Flagrant Conduct: Lawrence v. Texas, Gay Marriage, Gay Rights, Sexual Orientation
Speaking Engagements for Flagrant Conduct: The Story of Lawrence v. Texas
By Dale Carpenter on March 13, 2012 6:49 pm in Civil Rights, Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Flagrant Conduct: Lawrence v. Texas, Gay Rights, Sexual Orientation
Reassessing Our Federal and State Constitutions
By Ilya Somin on March 8, 2012 11:27 pm in Constitutional Amendments, Constitutional Law, Constitutional Theory, Federalism, Voting With Your Feet